CALGARY, AB — Today, on the first day of the Total E&P Joslyn North Mine hearing
in Fort McMurray, lawyers for the Oilsands Environmental Coalition (OSEC)
filed a motion arguing the hearing, which will determine whether the
project goes ahead, be adjourned based on Total's deficient environmental impact
assessment.

Canadian law requires a cumulative impacts assessment to
determine what the impacts of the project are when combined with other existing
and planned development. Total's assessment, however, does not meet these
requirements.

Total acknowledges it did not include an assessment of forest
fires or future forest harvest after 2016 in its assessment. The assessment also
ignores some planned oilsands mines — effectively ignoring tens of thousands
of hectares of disturbance.

"Total's application should be thrown out," says Simon Dyer, oil
sands program director for the Pembina Institute. "Total has prepared a
cumulative impacts assessment that does not consider cumulative impacts. There
is not enough information available to the Panel for them to proceed with a
fair and responsible assessment of the proposed project."

The Oilsands
Environmental Coalition includes the Pembina Institute, the Toxics Watch
Society of Alberta and the Fort McMurray Environmental Association. The Total
Joslyn North Mine Project, if approved, will result in 1.5-million tonnes of
greenhouse gas pollution each year (equivalent to putting over 270,000 cars on
the road), and destroy thousands of hectares of land.